"These elaborate hesitancies, far from being an
obstacle, were like a cobweb bridge . . . an invisible passage over which one
knew that silver-footed ironies, veiled jokes, tiptoe malices, were stealing to
explode a huge laugh." --Edith Wharton
It
shouldn't come as much of a shock that Jack Abramoff, the infamous Washington,
DC, super-lobbyist who has been accused of ripping off millions from his Native
American clients, is a rabid Zionist.
Abramoff,
in the late 1990s, set up a pro-Israel charity front called the Capital
Athletic Foundation. Sounds jovial enough. "The pitch . . . was hard to
resist," Michael Isikoff reported for Newsweek last summer, "a good
way to get access on Capitol Hill, he told his clients . . . was to contribute
to [his] worthy charity . . . [which] was supposed to provide sports programs
and teach 'leadership skills' to city youth. Donating to it also had a side
benefit, Abramoff told his clients: it was a favored cause of Rep. Tom
DeLay."
So
Abramoff dangled a carrot in front of his clients, advising them to donate to
his philanthropic venture. Why not, it was for a good cause. Plus, he boasted,
it would buy them access to Rep. Tom DeLay. It may indeed have bought them
access, but what Abramoff's customers didn't realize was that a large portion
of their money would never be spent on gearing up inner city kids to shoot some
b-ball -- rather, their dollars were shipped overseas to help arm Israeli
settlers in the occupied territories.
More
than $140,000 of the foundation's funds, reports Newsweek, was used to purchase
sniper scopes, night-vision binoculars, camouflage suits, thermal imagers and
other materiel which Abramoff's foundation called "security"
equipment.
Newsweek
also reports "these payments are part of a larger investigation to
determine if Abramoff defrauded his Indian tribe clients." Not
surprisingly Abramoff's ex-clients are fuming.
"This
is almost like outer-limits bizarre," Henry Buffalo, a lawyer for the
Saginaw Chippewa Indians, who contributed $25,000 to the Capital Athletic
Foundation, told Newsweek. "The tribe would never have given money for
this."
Abramoff's
clients had been duped.
Rep.
Delay, who has deservingly taken his share of heat for his association with
Abramoff, claims to know nothing of the Capital Athletic Foundation's financial
exploits. Still, it is unlikely Abramoff lied when he told his clients that his
foundation was a "favored cause" of Thomas DeLay -- for DeLay, like
Abramoff, is also a pro-Israel zealot.
During
a keynote speech at a fundamentalist Christian rally, called "Stand for
Israel," in early April of 2003, DeLay used his pulpit to preach to the
audience, "The United States stands for justice and that means we stand
for Israel . . . negotiating with these men (the PLO) with tongues like swords
is folly, and any agreement arrived at through such empty negotiations would
amount to a covenant with death . . . Israel's fight is our fight: against
terror, and for humanity. The United States, therefore, cannot serve as a
disinterested broker between [an] ally and its terrorist enemy."
It is
hard to stomach the irony. If there is any group in the US that can empathize
with the occupation of the Palestinian people -- it's the Native Americans. But
here Abramoff's clients were, unknowingly donating tens of thousands of dollars
so that Israeli settlers in the West Bank could continue to occupy defenseless
Palestinians. You can bet that DeLay and Abramoff snickered all the way to the
(West) bank.
Joshua Frank is the author of the new book,
"Left Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush," which has just been published by Common Courage
Press. You can order a copy at a discounted rate at www.brickburner.org. Joshua can be
reached at Joshua@brickburner.org.